FormattedText.BuildGeometry(Point) Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Returns a Geometry object that represents the formatted text, including all glyphs and text decorations.
public:
System::Windows::Media::Geometry ^ BuildGeometry(System::Windows::Point origin);
public System.Windows.Media.Geometry BuildGeometry (System.Windows.Point origin);
member this.BuildGeometry : System.Windows.Point -> System.Windows.Media.Geometry
Public Function BuildGeometry (origin As Point) As Geometry
Parameters
- origin
- Point
The top-left origin of the resulting geometry.
Returns
The Geometry object representation of the formatted text.
Examples
The following example shows how to create a FormattedText object and to retrieve the geometries of the formatted text and its bounding box.
/// <summary>
/// Create the outline geometry based on the formatted text.
/// </summary>
public void CreateText()
{
System.Windows.FontStyle fontStyle = FontStyles.Normal;
FontWeight fontWeight = FontWeights.Medium;
if (Bold) fontWeight = FontWeights.Bold;
if (Italic) fontStyle = FontStyles.Italic;
// Create the formatted text based on the properties set.
FormattedText formattedText = new FormattedText(
Text,
CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("en-us"),
FlowDirection.LeftToRight,
new Typeface(
Font,
fontStyle,
fontWeight,
FontStretches.Normal),
FontSize,
System.Windows.Media.Brushes.Black // This brush does not matter since we use the geometry of the text.
);
// Build the geometry object that represents the text.
_textGeometry = formattedText.BuildGeometry(new System.Windows.Point(0, 0));
// Build the geometry object that represents the text highlight.
if (Highlight)
{
_textHighLightGeometry = formattedText.BuildHighlightGeometry(new System.Windows.Point(0, 0));
}
}
''' <summary>
''' Create the outline geometry based on the formatted text.
''' </summary>
Public Sub CreateText()
Dim fontStyle As FontStyle = FontStyles.Normal
Dim fontWeight As FontWeight = FontWeights.Medium
If Bold = True Then
fontWeight = FontWeights.Bold
End If
If Italic = True Then
fontStyle = FontStyles.Italic
End If
' Create the formatted text based on the properties set.
Dim formattedText As New FormattedText(Text, CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("en-us"), FlowDirection.LeftToRight, New Typeface(Font, fontStyle, fontWeight, FontStretches.Normal), FontSize, Brushes.Black) ' This brush does not matter since we use the geometry of the text.
' Build the geometry object that represents the text.
_textGeometry = formattedText.BuildGeometry(New Point(0, 0))
' Build the geometry object that represents the text highlight.
If Highlight = True Then
_textHighLightGeometry = formattedText.BuildHighlightGeometry(New Point(0, 0))
End If
End Sub
Remarks
When text is converted to a Geometry object, it is no longer a collection of characters - you cannot modify the characters in the text string. However, you can affect the appearance of the converted text by modifying its stroke and fill properties.
The following examples illustrate several ways of creating visual effects by modifying the stroke and fill of converted text.
Example of setting stroke and fill to different colors
Example of an image brush applied to the stroke
Text that is converted to and rendered as a Geometry object may not look the same as text rendered directly:
Text converted to a Geometry object is not rendered using ClearType. In addition, the baseline of the converted is not snapped to a whole display pixel.
Small fonts, such as those commonly used in body text, may lose legibility, appear blurred, and vary in appearance.
Applies to
.NET